Home
/
Isiam
/
Islamic World
/
Hungry Gazans feed Egyptian troops
Hungry Gazans feed Egyptian troops
Dec 11, 2025 8:50 PM

  Mustapha Suleiman, 27, from J Block east of the Rafah crossing with Egypt, crosses through gaps in the iron fence on the border carrying bread, water, meat cans and a handful of vegetables for Egyptian soldiers stationed on the other side.

  "Whatever you offer on Saturday you will receive on Sunday," Suleiman says. "I am ready to help with what I have, for all the work they do."

  Egyptian troops have run short of essential supplies, caught up in clashes involving Bedouin groups. Serious clashes have erupted between riot police and Bedouin groups over the past two weeks.

  Supplies sent for Egyptian troops have not got through to them. The troops have appealed to people living in El-Arish town on the Egyptian side for help. And for troops on the Gaza border, help has come from Gazans – themselves on small rations as a result of the Israeli blockade.

  "We heard the Egyptian soldiers calling out to us, saying they had run out of food," a policeman in Gaza told IPS. Gazans are now "sharing their limited food with Egyptian soldiers."

  Many people can be seen crossing the ‘Philadelphia Corridor’ that separates Egypt from the Gaza Strip, carrying food and essential supplies. They find enough gaps in the fence and wall built before the Israeli withdrawal from Gaza in 2005.

  Some of the supplies being offered to Egyptian troops have earlier come in from the Egyptian side to Gaza through the underground tunnels. "We overcome our Gazan hurdles under the ground, and when Egyptians need us we will overcome their hurdles above the ground," Wael Al-Nasri who owns a tunnel tells IPS.

  Most tunnels have a shared ownership between Egyptian and Gazan partners. The tunnels are now beginning to see a movement in the opposite direction. Al-Nasri says he recently sent bags of flour back to his partner on the Egyptian side. In the face of clashes, it isn’t just the Egyptian army that is running short of food.

  "They have always been there for us these past five years during the Israeli siege of Gaza," says Al-Nasri. "They help us to stand tall, so we help them."

  Al-Nasri picked up the bags from a shop owned by Mohammed Qishta, to whom he had sold them earlier. Qishta parted with them readily. He has relatives on the Egyptian side, and says there is a scarcity on that side because of "new road blocks set up by violent thugs and armed groups." Many other dealers are sending goods back to Egypt through the tunnels, he says.

  The Palestinian government in Gaza is trying to restrict the outflow of essential goods such as flour and oil, says Qishta. If the flow of Egyptian goods through Sinai on the other side of Gaza comes to a halt, Gaza itself will be hit.

  PHOTO CAPTION

  Palestinian protesters wave Egyptian flags and shout slogans during a demonstration in Gaza City in support of the anti-government protests in Egypt calling for an end to President Hosni Mubarak's 30-year rule.

  Source: Aljazeera.net

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
Islamic World
Confusion clouds run-up to Egypt elections
  The streets of Egypt are teeming with the telltale signs of an upcoming election.   Campaign posters fill the once-barren spaces on the sides of buildings, and billboards featuring the faces of candidates vying for a role in the new Egypt loom over the crowded streets of Cairo.   However, what many...
Free Syrian Army grows in influence
  The attack by the Free Syrian Army (FSA) on an air force intelligence base in the suburbs of the capital Damascus on November 16 has raised the profile of the band of army deserters, who are seeking to end President Bashar al-Assad’s long rule.   Depending on whom you believe, the...
Deported Palestinians describe prison ordeal
  Hazem Asili, from the West Bank, was 25 years old when he was jailed by Israel in 1986. Abdelhakim Hnaini, also from the West Bank, was 27 years old when he was incarcerated in 1993. On October 11, a deal was brokered exchanging 1,027 Palestinian prisoners held by Israel for...
Syrian troops 'ordered to shoot to kill'
  More than 70 Syrian army commanders and officials have been named by former soldiers as having ordered attacks on unarmed protesters in that country, a US-based rights group says.   The report from Human Rights Watch names 74 commanders and military and intelligence officials as having allegedly "ordered, authorized, or condoned...
The Under-Examined Story of Fallujah
  Seven years after the U.S. invasion of Fallujah, there are reports of an alarming rise in the rates of birth defects and cancer. But the crisis, and its possible connection to weapons deployed by the United States during the war, remains woefully under-examined.   On November 8, 2004, U.S. military forces...
The Assads: An iron-fisted dynasty
  For four decades, the Assad family has ruled Syria, and while the popularity of the family among some sections in the country is undeniable, its run in power has not been without turmoil.   Hafez al-Assad, a military man, rose through the ranks and became Syria's president in 1971 after a...
Out of Guantanamo, into an Egyptian jail
  As parliamentary elections begin in Egypt, Reprieve's Life After Guantanamo team is working against the clock for the luckless Egyptian ex-Guantanamo prisoner Adel al-Gazzar, now re-imprisoned in Cairo. Like that of most Egyptians, Adel's future hangs in the balance, as does his liberty, and everything depends on whether Egypt is...
'Bugsplat': The Ugly US Drone War in Pakistan
  This weekend, Pakistan ordered the closure of the US drone base after a US attack killed 26 Pakistani soldiers near the Afghan border. This news will be welcomed by the people of Waziristan, where communities have borne the brunt of the "collateral damage" of the US covert drone war. But...
Life for Palestinians on the other side
  Talal Shreim could not stop beaming as he sat in his new living room in Doha, Qatar, finally surrounded by his family after having spent 10 years in an Israeli jail.   Less than 24 hours before, he was able to hug Tasneem, his 10-year-old daughter, for the first time since...
Palestinian families await prisoner exchange
  One thousand and twenty-seven Palestinians for one Israeli - this is the deal made between Hamas and Israel last week.   The agreement has been dubbed "the Shalit swap deal" - named after Gilad Shalit, the 25-year-old Israeli soldier who has been held in the Gaza Strip for more than five...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved